Flow transition criteria of a liquid jet into a liquid pool

•Jet breakup and droplet formation in immiscible liquid-liquid systems was studied experimentally.•The observed jet breakup behavior was classified into characteristic regimes.•The droplet size distribution was analyzed using image processing.•The variation of droplet size was compared with availabl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nuclear engineering and design 2017-04, Vol.315, p.128-143
Hauptverfasser: Saito, Shimpei, Abe, Yutaka, Koyama, Kazuya
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Jet breakup and droplet formation in immiscible liquid-liquid systems was studied experimentally.•The observed jet breakup behavior was classified into characteristic regimes.•The droplet size distribution was analyzed using image processing.•The variation of droplet size was compared with available melt-jet experiments.•Extrapolation to the expected SFR conditions implied that most of the hydrodynamic conditions would be the atomization regime. To better understand the fundamental interactions between melt jet and coolant during a core-disruptive accident at a sodium-cooled fast reactor, the jet breakup and droplet formation in immiscible liquid-liquid systems were studied experimentally. Experiments using two different pairs of test fluids were carried out at isothermal conditions. The observed jet breakup behavior was classified into characteristic regimes based on the classical Ohnesorge classification in liquid-gas systems. The variation in breakup length obtained in the present liquid-liquid system was similar to that in a liquid-gas system. The droplet size distribution in each breakup regime was analyzed using image processing and droplet formation via pinch-off, satellite formation, and entrainment was observed. The measured droplet size was compared with those available from melt jet experiments. Based on the observation and analysis results, the breakup regimes were organized on a dimensionless operating diagram, with the derived correlations representing the criteria for regime boundaries of a liquid-liquid system. Finally, the experimental data were extrapolated to the expected conditions of a sodium-cooled fast reactor. From this, it was implied that most of the hydrodynamic conditions during an accident would be close to the atomization regime, in which entrainment is the dominant process for droplet formation.
ISSN:0029-5493
1872-759X
DOI:10.1016/j.nucengdes.2017.02.011